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Posted
2 hours ago, OJAS said:

and it is (in the view of this particular cynic, at least) clearly in the interests of handsomely-remunerated tax consultants/advisers/agents/experts that they are not!

 

This could be it, explains why its so hard find information freely.

And I'm not sure how qualified some of these online experts actually are.

 

If we paid for tax consultations we could still end up with two differing views.

 

At the moment I am clinging to what Sherrings told me, he answered clearly and did not try to sell me anything even I asked what they might charge to handle the Thai side of things when it came to selling UK property.

 

 

  • Haha 1
  • 7 months later...
Posted

You can totally live in Thailand, pay tax there, and still have assets in the UK that HMRC will tax. The tax treaty between the UK and Thailand stops you from being taxed twice on the same income, which is handy. But it gets a bit tricky depending on what kind of income we’re talking about. For stuff like dividends and capital gains from UK shares, you’ll probably still need to pay tax in the UK, even if you’re not living there.
I looked into this when I moved abroad, and honestly, it’s not as straightforward as you’d think. There are so many little rules. If you’re navigating these complexities, getting VAT advisory from specialists could save you time and potential trouble.

 

Posted

You can totally live in Thailand, pay tax there, and still have assets in the UK that HMRC will tax. The tax treaty between the UK and Thailand stops you from being taxed twice on the same income, which is handy. But it gets a bit tricky depending on what kind of income we’re talking about. For stuff like dividends and capital gains from UK shares, you’ll probably still need to pay tax in the UK, even if you’re not living there.
I looked into this when I moved abroad, and honestly, it’s not as straightforward as you’d think. There are so many little rules. If you’re navigating these complexities, getting VAT advisory from specialists could save you time and potential trouble.

 

  • 5 weeks later...
Posted

I have a SIPP in the UK and was hoping to pass it on IHT free , but that`s not possible now thanks to RR and the recent budget . Presently , any withdrawals are taxed at source ( usually 20 % ) . If I move to Thailand and become non UK resident for tax , can I claim back these deductions ?

I also have dividend income , not sure if I need to pay UK tax on these or not .

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